Fig. 1. Life cycle of Plasmodium in the mosquito. The approximate
developmental time at which each stage occurs in Plasmodium berghei
(maintained at 20°C) is indicated. Transmission starts when the mosquito
ingests an infected bloodmeal (0 h). Within minutes, gametocytes develop into
gametes (the star-shaped figure illustrates exflagellation, which is the
formation of male gametes) that fuse to form the zygote. At 24 h, the motile
ookinete invades the midgut epithelium and differentiates into an oocyst.
About 2 weeks later, the oocyst ruptures, releasing thousands of sporozoites
into the mosquito body cavity. Of all the tissues that sporozoites come in
contact with, they can invade only the salivary gland. When the mosquito bites
another vertebrate host, transmission is completed by release of sporozoites
from the salivary glands (not shown). Reprinted from Ghosh et al.
(2003), with permission from
Elsevier Science.